Mammon - Deceptively Enticing

“No one can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or else he will be loyal to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon.” ~ Matthew 6:24
Many of us, I suspect, have never given much thought to this particular Scripture and its’ meaning. I had not done so myself until a few years ago. Since then, I have been on a journey of discovery as to this verse’s meaning and impact on my life and those around me.
I sense that even in these days of the pandemic, this ‘drawing force’ is seeking to find a foothold in our lives. Mammon is a little-known influence that creeps up unsuspecting. Like a gnat hovering around our head, we become familiar with it and we give it no attention yet it keeps buzzing and circling overhead, seeking to draw us in.
The word ‘mammon’ is much more than the word ‘money’, but conveys a sense of a ‘force’ or spiritual power. Most of us tend not to think along those lines but when Jesus taught His disciples and warned them about the influence of mammon, He knew it was more than simply money.
Jesus knew there would be a contending for our affections and energies, which is why He frames His comments by calling mammon for what it is – a master. A master can only be called that if it has the ability to influence or affect us. So, in essence, Jesus says we will serve one or the other.
Mammon seeks to occupy the throne of our heart rather than the Lord. Seeking to have its every need and demand to be fulfilled, mammon is a taskmaster.
In these days of quarantine, mammon woos us to place our trust in money and possessions to give us security rather than trusting the Lord and His ability to provide. Fear and worry become our day and night companions shaping our thoughts and emotions. We either continually worry whether we will have enough or we strive to make more money, being self-sufficient and self-reliant, best able to manage our own situation.
Sometimes this ‘master’ causes us to purchase things we do not need to fill an inner need, rather than turning to the Lord. We find ourselves making purchases to make ourselves feel good. We are saving money by travelling much less so why not? We find ourselves making unwise purchasing decisions and at some level, throw caution and wisdom to the wind.
These are days to choose which master we will serve. As we find ourselves wrestling with these issues, the Lord asks us to search our hearts and decide which one we will serve – Him or mammon.
As we come to Jesus, He sets us free from poor financial decisions and fulfills our longings. He is not the taskmaster mammon is, but Jesus invites us to discover how serving Him is so much more freeing and liberating.









